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ABOUT THE MILLENNIUM FELLOWSHIP - CLASS OF 2025

United Nations Academic Impact and MCN are proud to partner on the Millennium Fellowship. This year, 60,000+ young leaders applied to join the Class of 2025 on 7,000+ campuses across 170 nations. 290+ campuses worldwide (less than 5%) were selected to host the 4,500+ Millennium Fellows.

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UNITED NATIONS ACADEMIC IMPACT AND MCN PROUDLY PRESENT RAYMOND WUNDE NDAMBI, A MILLENNIUM FELLOW FOR THE CLASS OF 2025.

University of Ghana | Accra, Ghana | Advancing SDG 3 & UNAI 3

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" The Millennium Fellowship offers an environment to collaborate with driven peers, refine problem-solving skills, and apply them to projects that deliver measurable health outcomes. I value opportunities where precision, strategy, and teamwork drive success — the same principles at the core of great surgery. This platform will strengthen my ability to translate research and innovation into practical solutions that improve patient care and can be scaled globally "

Millennium Fellowship Project: All Hands Project

The All Hands Project is an initiative focused on teaching everyday people how to respond to basic medical emergencies before professional help arrives. Many people hesitate in emergency situations not because they don't want to help or they don't care, but because of fear, or they just do not know what to do. My project solves this problem by providing simple and practical steps that anyone can follow. We will be using social media, workshops and community outreaches to teach skills like Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR), stopping severe bleeding, what to do when someone has been electrocuted, drowned, having a seizure or choking e.t.c. The goal is to help people feel prepared so they can act quickly instead of waiting for others to step in. The All Hands Project will help people realize that they do not need to be doctors or paramedics to help in an emergency. They just need to know what to do and be willing to do it

About the Millennium Fellow

Raymond Ndambi is a medical student at the University of Ghana Medical School, Korle-Bu Campus, whose curiosity for precision and problem-solving led him to a deep passion for surgery and research. Born in Cameroon and shaped by diverse West African experiences, he approaches medicine with both technical ambition and a human perspective.
Raymond has been instrumental in creating opportunities for fellow students to engage in impactful research, believing that innovation begins with collaboration. With a vision that bridges the operating room and the wider world, he is driven to develop surgical solutions that not only save lives but also inspire a new generation of medical leaders.

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